Election worker: Giuliani’s suspicious “fake vote USB” was actually … a ginger mint

Shaye Moss and his mother Ruby Freeman turned their lives upside down when then-President Donald Trump and Rudy Giuliani highlighted them in an increasingly retaliatory effort to cancel the election. Giuliani accused the two election workers in Fulton County, Georgia, of taking out fake ballot papers and passing a suspicious USB stick while counting election results. But the “USB stick” – which Giuliani later suggested could be a drug – was ginger mint, Moss told the Jan. 6 committee in a shocking and emotional testimony Tuesday.

Moss and Freeman were inundated with death threats and had a crowd at Moss’s grandmother’s house trying to arrest a citizen. She said the stress made her gain £ 60, quit work and quit. “I don’t do anything anymore,” he said. “I guess everything I do has affected my life in a big way. In every way. All because of lies.” In a previously recorded testimony, Freeman said she was a businesswoman known to all as Lady Ruby, but that she had to stop using her name and leave her home for months after the FBI said she was unsure. “Do you know how it feels when the President of the United States appoints you?” she said.

Read it on The Hill

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *